zacksz Posted June 3, 2007 Posted June 3, 2007 This has probably been asked many times. I have a Plextor PX-760A Drive I am using Memorex 16x DVD+R Disc's Why is my average write speed so much slower than 16 X? At first it was even slower so I checked the Plextor web site and I saw a Firmware Update, this did help it speed up but I would expect somewhere closer to 16 X. I am trying to get this tuned up ASAP I have to burn 30 Copies of a DVD in the next couple days. Other than that I am very happy with the product. I 23:26:47 Operation Started! I 23:26:47 Source File: X:\My Videos\ISO\TEEBALL_07.iso I 23:26:47 Source File Sectors: 894,656 (MODE1/2048) I 23:26:47 Source File Size: 1,832,255,488 bytes I 23:26:47 Source File Volume Identifier: TEELBALL_07 I 23:26:47 Source File Implementation Identifier: Ulead Systems USA Inc. I 23:26:48 Source File File System(s): ISO9660, Joliet, UDF (1.02) I 23:26:48 Destination Device: [0:0:0] PLEXTOR DVDR PX-760A 1.06 (D:) (ATA) I 23:26:48 Destination Media Type: DVD+R (Disc ID: RICOHJPN-R03-04) (Speeds: 6x, 8x, 12x, 16x) I 23:26:48 Destination Media Sectors: 2,295,104 I 23:26:48 Write Mode: DVD I 23:26:48 Write Type: DAO I 23:26:48 Write Speed: MAX I 23:26:48 Link Size: Auto I 23:26:48 Test Mode: No I 23:26:48 BURN-Proof: Enabled I 23:26:48 Filling Buffer... (40 MB) I 23:26:49 Writing LeadIn... I 23:27:53 Writing Image... (LBA: 0 - 894655) W 23:28:46 Waiting for buffers to recover... W 23:28:48 Waiting for hard disk activity to reach threshold level... I 23:28:49 Writing Image... I 23:30:54 Synchronising Cache... I 23:30:58 Closing Track... I 23:30:59 Finalising Disc... I 23:31:13 Image MD5: 6d58a3c523310f5aa194cd43cf744024 I 23:31:17 Operation Successfully Completed! - Duration: 00:04:26 I 23:31:17 Average Write Rate: 9,885 KB/s (7.1x) - Maximum Write Rate: 15,642 KB/s (11.3x) I 23:31:17 Cycling Tray before Verify... I 23:31:46 Device Ready! I 23:39:10 Operation Started! I 23:39:10 Source File: X:\My Videos\ISO\TEEBALL_07.iso I 23:39:10 Source File Sectors: 894,656 (MODE1/2048) I 23:39:10 Source File Size: 1,832,255,488 bytes I 23:39:10 Source File Volume Identifier: TEELBALL_07 I 23:39:10 Source File Implementation Identifier: Ulead Systems USA Inc. I 23:39:10 Source File File System(s): ISO9660, Joliet, UDF (1.02) I 23:39:10 Destination Device: [0:0:0] PLEXTOR DVDR PX-760A 1.06 (D:) (ATA) I 23:39:10 Destination Media Type: DVD+R (Disc ID: RICOHJPN-R03-04) (Speeds: 6x, 8x, 12x, 16x) I 23:39:10 Destination Media Sectors: 2,295,104 I 23:39:10 Write Mode: DVD I 23:39:10 Write Type: DAO I 23:39:10 Write Speed: MAX I 23:39:10 Link Size: Auto I 23:39:10 Test Mode: No I 23:39:10 BURN-Proof: Enabled I 23:39:11 Filling Buffer... (40 MB) I 23:39:11 Writing LeadIn... I 23:40:27 Writing Image... (LBA: 0 - 894655) I 23:43:11 Synchronising Cache... I 23:43:15 Closing Track... I 23:43:16 Finalising Disc... I 23:43:30 Image MD5: 6d58a3c523310f5aa194cd43cf744024 I 23:43:33 Operation Successfully Completed! - Duration: 00:04:19 I 23:43:33 Average Write Rate: 10,977 KB/s (7.9x) - Maximum Write Rate: 15,622 KB/s (11.3x) I 23:43:33 Cycling Tray before Verify... I 23:44:03 Device Ready! I 23:49:29 Operation Started! I 23:49:29 Source File: X:\My Videos\ISO\TEEBALL_07.iso I 23:49:29 Source File Sectors: 894,656 (MODE1/2048) I 23:49:29 Source File Size: 1,832,255,488 bytes I 23:49:29 Source File Volume Identifier: TEELBALL_07 I 23:49:29 Source File Implementation Identifier: Ulead Systems USA Inc. I 23:49:29 Source File File System(s): ISO9660, Joliet, UDF (1.02) I 23:49:29 Destination Device: [0:0:0] PLEXTOR DVDR PX-760A 1.06 (D:) (ATA) I 23:49:29 Destination Media Type: DVD+R (Disc ID: RICOHJPN-R03-04) (Speeds: 6x, 8x, 12x, 16x) I 23:49:29 Destination Media Sectors: 2,295,104 I 23:49:29 Write Mode: DVD I 23:49:29 Write Type: DAO I 23:49:29 Write Speed: MAX I 23:49:29 Link Size: Auto I 23:49:29 Test Mode: No I 23:49:29 BURN-Proof: Enabled I 23:49:30 Filling Buffer... (40 MB) I 23:49:30 Writing LeadIn... I 23:50:47 Writing Image... (LBA: 0 - 894655) I 23:53:31 Synchronising Cache... I 23:53:35 Closing Track... I 23:53:36 Finalising Disc... I 23:53:50 Image MD5: 6d58a3c523310f5aa194cd43cf744024 I 23:53:53 Operation Successfully Completed! - Duration: 00:04:21 I 23:53:54 Average Write Rate: 10,977 KB/s (7.9x) - Maximum Write Rate: 15,648 KB/s (11.3x) I 23:53:54 Cycling Tray before Verify... I 23:54:24 Device Ready!
LIGHTNING UK! Posted June 3, 2007 Posted June 3, 2007 16x is only reached at the end of the disc. The quality of the media also plays a part. The drives are clever and will slow themselves down if they think the burn quality isn't up to scratch. So you need to be burning a FULL disc, AND onto decent media to get the full 16x / 18x etc.
Shamus_McFartfinger Posted June 3, 2007 Posted June 3, 2007 My 2c:- 16x/18x is the maximum speed attained at the outside track under lab conditions. i.e. Perfect conditions. That means perfect media, perfect drive, perfect hardware connections, top-of-the-line PC with no "baggage" running in the background to slow things down etc.. etc..
volvofl10 Posted June 3, 2007 Posted June 3, 2007 and its like the car adverts , where our latest model does 99 miles per gallon as long as its downhill on a dry day with a gale force 10 wind pushing you ................oh and theres a letter Z in the months name id be happy to attain 11.3x regularly
Shamus_McFartfinger Posted June 3, 2007 Posted June 3, 2007 So would I but I've still got a hundred Verbatim MKM-001's to get rid of before that happens.
LOCOENG Posted June 3, 2007 Posted June 3, 2007 http://forum.digital-digest.com/showthread.php?t=69883
Shamus_McFartfinger Posted June 3, 2007 Posted June 3, 2007 Hmm... a quick look at the thread doesn't impress me that much. Some of those claiming to burn at 18x actually burned at 4x, 8x or 12x. Not what I'd call exciting. Particularly when the maximum speed was attained near the outer edge of the disk, just like we said it does. Physics is a cruel mistress.
LOCOENG Posted June 3, 2007 Posted June 3, 2007 The best I could ever do was 13X and change...and since you can only achieve the higher speeds towards the outside of the disc the measurement is best taken in the amount of time it takes to burn the entire disc. This would give you the highest average speed and I haven't found that burning at higher speeds to give that much less in quality, only a slight difference.
Shamus_McFartfinger Posted June 3, 2007 Posted June 3, 2007 Agreed. A burn @ 8x is still going to be completed in under 10 minutes on single layer media. The quality will be good, it'll verify properly and everyone will be happy. At 16x you're asking the burner to write something like 22MB/sec which is alot. BTW, I just had a quick look at your forum and it looks pretty snappy.
LOCOENG Posted June 3, 2007 Posted June 3, 2007 You talkin about BB? It isn't much...but it's all I have. LOL
zacksz Posted June 4, 2007 Author Posted June 4, 2007 Thanks for the Input, sounds good to me I just was checking. The disc I was burning to test where only a half a disc and never reached the end of the disc. I guess my speed isn't that bad.
zacksz Posted June 4, 2007 Author Posted June 4, 2007 Who Makes the Best Media? I guess based on my results the DVD's I have are OK.
cornholio7 Posted June 4, 2007 Posted June 4, 2007 verbatim and taiyo yuden are the best. dont take our word for it , look here http://www.digitalfaq.com/media/dvdmedia.htm tests done on this forum on your media http://forum.imgburn.com/index.php?showtopic=580 show it to be inconsistent
volvofl10 Posted June 5, 2007 Posted June 5, 2007 but I would expect somewhere closer to 16 X. EDIT I 23:39:10 BURN-Proof: Enabled I 23:43:33 Average Write Rate: 10,977 KB/s (7.9x) - Maximum Write Rate: 15,622 KB/s (11.3x) try one with out Burn Proof enabled , be warned though, it may result in a coaster . Burn Proof slows down the write process if it thinks the drive cannot work at the set speed for any reason . the I/O speeds and connections are the usual things to slow a burn down like Shamus told you earlier
LIGHTNING UK! Posted June 5, 2007 Posted June 5, 2007 I think you're confusing 'Burn Proof' with 'WOPC / SolidBurn / etc etc' Burn Proof just tells the drive to wait for more data if it's buffer runs out - rather than erroring out and creating a coaster. The only problem here is that only just over 1/3 the disc was burnt - hence max speed would never have been reached.
volvofl10 Posted June 5, 2007 Posted June 5, 2007 if the disc had been full , wouldnt your explanation slow the overall average write speed down anyway though when the buffers wait to be re-filled ? /me thinks it could be a "close but no cigar "one here
chewy Posted June 6, 2007 Posted June 6, 2007 Hmm... a quick look at the thread doesn't impress me that much. Some of those claiming to burn at 18x actually burned at 4x, 8x or 12x. Not what I'd call exciting. Particularly when the maximum speed was attained near the outer edge of the disk, just like we said it does. Physics is a cruel mistress. page 2 had some decent burns that hit 16x, even by a noob of course the purpose of the thread was not burn as fast as possible, but to have good burns in a timely manner
LIGHTNING UK! Posted June 6, 2007 Posted June 6, 2007 Yes, it would lower the average, but you'd still see the 'maximum' reach the expected 16x - and that's enough to know it's working fine.
blutach Posted June 6, 2007 Posted June 6, 2007 The MCC-004s I use, attain 16x at around the 3.5Gb mark. The firmware of my LG 4163B allows it to run at constant spin rate (full CAV) I also have no issues with enabling BURP (for some reason I prefer this acronym). Regards
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